Deccan Chronicle

Sharp Shelly splits 100m field

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Paris, June 19: ShellyAnn Fraser-Pryce hammered home her status as world championsh­ip favourite on Saturday by equalling her world best time this year to win the

100m at the Paris Diamond League meeting.

The veteran Jamaican sprinter triumphed in 10.67 seconds, shrugging off the crushing 30-degree heat at the city’s Charlety stadium.

A two-time Olympic champion over 100m, the

35-year-old Fraser-Pryce equalled the 2022 best time she set in Nairobi in May.

The nine-time world champion’s win illustrate­d her threat to reigning

Olympic champion Elaine Thompson-Herah at next month’s world championsh­ips in Eugene, Oregon.

Both will meet next week at the Jamaican trials.

“I feel very good, technicall­y it was very good. The goal is always to be on top technicall­y, then the lap times follow,” said FraserPryc­e.

“Physically I was good too. Running 10.6, only a few sprinters can achieve that,” she added.

Britain’s Daryll Neita was second Saturday in 10.99sec with Marie-Josee Ta Lou of Ivory Coast third in 11.01sec.

Fraser-Pryce has already qualified for the 100m in Eugene as she is the defending champion.

However, she said she has “not decided yet” on whether she will attempt the sprint double in Oregon. “We’ll see if I’m ready to do it physically and mentally,” she had said on Friday.

After racing to 10.05 seconds over the 100m in Oslo on Thursday, Andre De Grasse returned to his favoured 200m in the French capital.

But the Canadian Olympic gold medallist was only fourth on Saturday in a race won by Luxolo Adams of South Africa in 19.82sec.

Ukraine’s Yaroslava Mahuchikh, silver medallist at the 2019 world championsh­ips and bronze medal winner at the 2020 Olympics, won the high jump with a season-best 2.01m.

Mahuchikh won on her second attempt, improving on her previous seasonlead­ing 2.0m at the Eugene Diamond League meet.

She tried and failed three times at 2.05m, a centimetre above her career best.

Mahuchikh topped an allUkraine podium in the event ahead of Iryna Gerashchen­ko (1.98m) and Yuliya Levchenko (1.95m).

There was also a season best in the 3,000m steeplecha­se for Bahrain’s Winfred Mutile Yavi.

The 22-year-old won in a time of 8min 56.55sec, making her the fourth best performer in the history of the discipline.

Behind her, Ethiopia’s Sembo Alemayehu, only 17 years old, ran in 9min

09.19sec.

Close to a world record in the 110m hurdles last week, Devon Allen of the United States, who plans to juggle his sporting career between American football and athletics, won in

13.16sec.

His performanc­e came just 48 hours after his

13.22sec run in Oslo.

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